Sixty-seven years. That is how long the Matterhorn Bobsleds has been sitting at the intersection of Fantasyland and Tomorrowland at Disneyland, visible from across the park, photographed by more guests than almost any other structure in theme park history, and delivering the same reliable combination of speed, darkness, and an Abominable Snowman encounter that has been startling guests since the day it opened.
That day was June 14, 1959. This weekend, the attraction turns 67, and Disney just confirmed when it is going back offline for summer maintenance and, more importantly, when it is coming back.
The Dates at Disneyland
The Matterhorn Bobsleds will close for refurbishment on July 20, 2026. The last operating day before the closure is July 19. The confirmed reopening date is July 24, four days after the closure begins.
That four-day window is significantly better news than most summer guests were bracing for. An open-ended closure at the peak of the summer travel season for one of Disneyland's most iconic attractions would have been a meaningful disruption for the volume of guests who have the Matterhorn on their non-negotiable list. A four-day window is a manageable inconvenience.
Guests with trips falling between July 20 and July 23 should plan their Disneyland day without counting on the Matterhorn. Guests arriving July 24 or later are clear. Guests with any flexibility in their travel dates who consider the Matterhorn essential should aim for July 19 or July 24 on either side of the window.
Why This Attraction Matters
The Matterhorn Bobsleds is not just a Disneyland landmark. It is a piece of theme park history that predates most of the industry's foundational developments.
Walt Disney fell in love with the real Swiss Matterhorn while filming Third Man on the Mountain in 1959 and returned to Disneyland determined to build his own version. What began as a 20-foot forested mound called Holiday Hill eventually became the 147-foot artificial mountain that now defines a significant portion of the Disneyland skyline. The attraction opened on June 14, 1959, and holds the distinction of being the first tubular steel roller coaster ever built anywhere in the world, a development that changed the direction of the entire amusement park industry.
The ride operates two simultaneous bobsled tracks, one on the Fantasyland side and one on the Tomorrowland side, and it remains one of the only Disneyland attractions that has never been replicated at any other Disney park in the world. That distinction makes it genuinely irreplaceable for guests who understand what it represents within the broader Disney catalog.
The Wider Disneyland Closure Picture
The Matterhorn announcement lands in the context of a summer 2026 closure schedule at Disneyland that has been running heavier than typical.
The good news first. Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters, which had been closed since April 13, reopened on June 12. That reopening removes one significant family-friendly attraction from the closure list just as the Matterhorn announcement adds another, which is a meaningful development for guests traveling with younger children who had been planning around the Buzz Lightyear absence.
The less good news. Pirates of the Caribbean has been closed since May 4 with no confirmed return date. That ongoing closure is one of the more significant gaps in the classic Disneyland experience, and its open-ended timeline continues to affect guests whose trips are built around the original park icons.
At Disney California Adventure, Inside Out Emotional Whirlwind has been offline since January with no confirmed return. Silly Symphony Swings closed April 27. Soarin' Over California transitions to Soarin' Across America on July 2 as a planned update tied to the America 250 celebration rather than a standard maintenance closure. The ongoing Avengers Campus expansion has rerouted the walkway between Avengers Campus and Cars Land, though both areas remain accessible via the Performance Corridor.
The Simple Version
The Matterhorn turns 67 this weekend. It is closing July 20 and reopening July 24. Four days offline after 67 years of continuous operation is not a crisis. It is routine maintenance on an irreplaceable attraction that has earned every bit of the care Disney puts into keeping it running.
Know the dates. Plan around them. The mountain will be back before most guests have had time to properly miss it.





